We present an overview of the cryo-amplifier concept and design utilized in the DiPOLE100 laser system built for use at the HiLASE Center, which has been successfully tested operating at an average power of 1kW. Following this we describe the alterations made to the design in the second generation system being constructed for high energy density (HED) experiments in the HED beamline at the European XFEL. These changes are predominantly geometric in nature, however also include improved mount design and improved control over the temporal shape of the output pulse. Finally, we comment on future plans for development of the DiPOLE laser amplifier architecture.

Many high power laser facilities are in operation all around the world and include various tight optical components such as large focussing lenses. Such lenses exhibit generally long focal lengths which induces some issues for their optical testing during manufacturing and inspection. Indeed, their transmitted wave fronts need to be very accurate and interferometric testing is the baseline to achieve that. But, it is always a problem to manage simultaneously long testing distances and fine accuracies in such interferometry testing. Taking example of the large focusing lenses produced for the Orion experimentation at AWE (UK), the presentation will describe which kind of testing method has been developed to demonstrate simultaneously good performances with sufficiently good repeatability and absolute accuracy. Special emphasis will be made onto the optical manufacturing issues and interferometric testing solutions. Some ZEMAX results presenting the test set-up and the calibration method will be presented as well. The presentation will conclude with a brief overview of the existing “state of the art” at Thales SESO for these technologies.

A new generation of diode-pumped solid-state lasers has been developed that enables ultra-stable Ti:Sapphire pumping
at high energies. We report an injection-seeded, all diode-pumped high-energy Nd:YLF laser system based on a master
oscillator power amplifier (MOPA) configuration. The laser produces pulses with over 4 J of pulse energy at 10 Hz, 527
nm, and pulse duration of ~13 ns. The laser is specifically designed to produce a uniform, flat-top beam in the near field.
Details of the laser design are discussed. The master oscillator is an injection seeded electro-optical Q-switched TEM00
mode laser. It produces stable, temporally-smooth laser pulses as the source for the system. The uniformity of the flat top
beam is discussed. The pulse energy stability and beam pointing stability are thoroughly investigated and reported. The
lifetime test results for the pump diodes are also presented.

High-power lasers, including high-peak power lasers (HPPL) and high-average power lasers (HAPL), attract much interest for enormous variety of applications in inertial fusion energy (IFE), materials processing, defense, spectroscopy, and high-field physics research. To meet the requirements of high efficiency and quality, a “gain chip” concept is proposed to properly design the pumping, cooling and lasing fields. The gain chip mainly consists of the laser diode arrays, lens duct, rectangle wave guide and slab-shaped gain media. For the pumping field, the pump light will be compressed and homogenized by the lens duct to high irradiance with total internal reflection, and further coupled into the gain media through its two edge faces. For the cooling field, the coolant travels along the flow channel created by the adjacent slabs in the other two edge-face direction, and cool the lateral faces of the gain media. For the lasing field, the laser beam travels through the lateral faces and experiences minimum thermal wavefront distortions. Thereby, these three fields are in orthogonality offering more spatial freedom to handle them during the construction of the lasers. Transverse gradient doping profiles for HPPL and HAPL have been employed to achieve uniform gain distributions (UGD) within the gain media, respectively. This UGD will improve the management for both amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) and thermal behavior. Since each “gain chip” has its own pump source, power scaling can be easily achieved by placing identical “gain chips” along the laser beam axis without disturbing the gain and thermal distributions. To detail our concept, a 1-kJ pulsed amplifier is designed and optical-to-optical efficiency up to 40% has been obtained. We believe that with proper coolant (gas or liquid) and gain media (Yb:YAG, Nd:glass or Nd:YAG) our “gain chip” concept might provide a general configuration for high-power lasers with high efficiency and quality.

Laser Inertial Fusion Energy (IFE) has been attracting the interests of the researchers around the world, because of the promising to the future energy. The Yb:YAG was broadly used in the research field of high-peak power and large energy laser with repetition-rate for IFE because of its outstanding performance, including significant thermal and mechanical capacities, long upper energy level lifetime, high quantum efficiency and highly doping capacity. But it exhibits high saturation fluence at room temperature because of the small emission and absorption cross-section. And at the same time this gain material exhibits self-absorption of laser because of the thermal population at lower laser level at room temperature. Ant it appears to have been solved by means of the cryogenic temperature, but the total efficiency of the laser system will be decreased as the use of cryogenic temperature.
The amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) effect of the amplifier can be relaxed by means of edge-cladded absorption material. And the difficulties of edge cladding can be will solved as the emergence of ceramics. But at present the ceramics exhibits high scattering and many disfigurements, which limited the application in the high-power large-energy laser system. So the edge-cladding of Yb:YAG crystal will be a key issue for solution the ASE in amplifier.
In this paper, we will introduce a 10J water-cooled DPSSL system, based on Yb:YAG crystal at room temperature. In this system a new edge cladding method has been used, that the Yb:YAG crystal was edge cladded by Cr:YAG ceramics, which was used as the absorption material of ASE. The amplifier was an active mirror water-cooled room temperature amplifier. With the help of this edge cladding the ASE has been lowered, and about 5 times small signal gain has been obtained in a single pass amplification, which was much higher than the earlier of 2 times. And the wavefront aberrance of the laser beam was also reduced due to the thermal equilibrium between the edge cladding and the gain region. the amplifiers can be stably operated under 10Hz. Finally the output of the laser system was about 7.15J@10Hz and 10.8J@1-2Hz. The total optical-to-optical efficiency was about 8.3% for 1-2Hz (under the condition of 120kW/1ms pumping, 880mJ input and 10.8J output) and 5.6% for 10Hz.

Polarization encoded (PE) Ti:sapphire amplifier can easily pre-shape the spectrum of amplified pulses. This property can be used to compensate for the spectral red-shifting and gain narrowing that are typically observed in Ti:Sapphire lasers. We demonstrate experimentally that active pre-shaping of the pulse spectrum in a PE amplifier combined with saturated amplification in the following conventional amplifier can conserve and even broaden the overall amplification bandwidth.
A combined amplifier that includes PE- amplification (during the first passes) and a conventional one in the following saturation phase is also proposed and studied by computer modelling. This allows to achieve both the broad bandwidth and high efficiency in a single amplifier. A 5 passes combined PE amplifier was simulated. The seed was firstly amplified by 3 passes with the PE amplification scheme, then the seed was decoded and directed back to the crystal for 2 additional passes of a saturated conventional amplification. Because the seed was already decoded before the last saturation passes in the amplifier, the energy extraction efficiency reached 44% which is similar to that of a conventional Ti:sapphire amplifier. The amplified bandwidth of 125 nm was obtained with a Gaussian seed spectrum of 100nm.
We show experimentally that the decoding efficiency of PE amplifier can be optimized by changing the thickness of the decoding quartz. At gain of ~30, the decoding efficiency of ~75% was achieved with the thickness of the decoding quartz of 35.1mm (thickness of the encoding quartz was 17.4mm), while the decoding efficiency of 80% was reached at gain of ~10. It shows that smaller gain guaranties better efficiency and also a smoother spectral profile.
The compressibility of the PE amplified pulses close to the transform limit is verified experimentally.

The optical elements of femtosecond high peak power lasers have to fulfill more and more strict requirements in order to support pulses with high intensity and broad spectrum. In most cases chirped pulse amplification scheme is used to generate high peak power ultrashort laser pulses, where a very precise control of spectral intensity and spectral phase is required in reaching transform-limited temporal shape at the output. In the case of few cycle regime, the conventional bulk glass, prism-, grating- and their combination based compressors are not sufficient anymore, due to undesirable nonlinear effects in their material and proneness to optical damages. The chirped mirrors are also commonly used to complete the compression after a beam transport system just before the target. Moreover, the manufacturing technology requires quality checks right after production and over the lifetime of the mirror as well, since undesired deposition on the surface can lead alteration from the designed value over a large part of the aperture. For the high harmonic generation, polarization gating technology is used to generate single attosecond pulses [1]. In this case the pulse to be compressed has various polarization state falling to the chirped mirrors. For this reason, it is crucial to measure the dispersion of the mirrors for the different polarization states.
In this presentation we demonstrate a simple technique to measure the dispersion of arbitrary mirror at angles of incidence from 0 to 55 degree, even for a 12” optics. A large aperture 4” mirror has been scanned over with micrometer accuracy and the dispersion property through the surface has been investigated with a stable interference fringes in that robust geometry. We used Spectrally Resolved Interferometry, which is based on a Michaelson interferometer and a combined visible and infrared spectrometer. Tungsten halogen lamp with 10 mW coupled optical power was used as a white-light source so with the selected spectrometer we could investigate over the 500-1300 nm spectral range. We also measured the mirrors with broadband oscillator pulses, and we found that the dispersion was the same for both light source. Group Delay Dispersion was obtained with a ±2 fs^2 accuracy from the Fourier Transform method of the interference fringes. Using an adjunct mirror, we made possible to change continuously the angle of incidence at the chirped mirror within 3 and 55°. On the input part of the interferometer we placed a wire-grid polarizer, and sensitivity of the chirp mirrors to the polarization state have been measured at different incidence angles. To present the flexibility of the device we scanned two different compressor mirrors with +100 fs^2 and -500 fs^2 at the 800 nm central wavelength. We separately developed an optical arrangement to detect Group Delay shift between s and p polarization reflections of large aperture chirped compressor mirrors and we found that it’s below the detection limit, so further investigation will be necessary.
1. M. Ivanov, P. B. Corkum, T. Zuo, and A. Bandrauk, Routes to Control of Intense-Field Atomic Polarizability, Phys. Rev. Lett. 74, 1995

The temporal shape of recompressed Ti:sapphire CPA pulses typically contains relatively long pre- and post- pedestals appearing on a picosecond time scale. Despite playing a key role in laser-matter interactions, these artifacts – especially the shape of the leading front of the recompressed pulses – are poorly investigated and understood. The related publications consider picosecond pedestals appearing at both fronts of the main pulse to be related to scattering of the stretched pulse off diffraction gratings inside the stretcher or due to clipping of the pulse spectrum at dielectric coatings. In our experiments we analyzed different types of stretcher-compressor combinations used in Ti:Sapphire laser systems. These include a prism-based stretcher and a bulk compressor, transmission and reflection diffraction gratings - based combinations. We identified pedestals that are typical for the particular stretcher-compressor combination. Especially investigated are those which are coherent with the major recompressed pulse, since with self-phase modulation in power amplifiers they will grow nonlinearly and finally appear symmetric around the major pulse, generating the pre-pedestal from the post-pedestal. Thus, a previously unreported influence of the trailing pedestal has been identified. It is commonly known that recompressed pulses from Ti:sapphire chirped-pulse amplifier systems are accompanied by a slowly decaying ragged post-pedestal. The detailed investigation shows that it consists of numerous pulses with temporal separation in the picosecond range. These are coherent with the main pulse. Moreover, the temporal structure of the trailing pedestal is independent of the particular realization of the Ti:sapphire system and it is present in radiation of any Ti:Sapphire CPA system including Kerr- mode locked master oscillators. Our investigations show that the coherent ragged post-pedestal is the post-radiation of inverted Ti:sapphire medium resulting from phonon-photon interactions.

High peak power CPA laser systems can deliver now few petawatt pulses [1]. Reaching the high energies with broad spectral bandwidth necessary for these pulses was possible by the use of large aperture Ti:Sa crystals as final amplifier media. Wide applications for these systems will be possible if the repetition rate could be increased. Therefore, thermal deposition in Ti:Sa amplifiers is a key issue, which has to be solved in case of high average power pumping. The thin disk (TD) laser technology, which is intensively developed nowadays by using new laser materials, is able to overcome thermal distortions and damages of laser crystals [2]. TD technique also has the potential to be used in systems with both high peak and average power. For this, the commonly used laser materials with low absorption and emission cross sections, also low heat conductivity, like Yb:YAG, need to be replaced by a gain medium that supports broad enough emission spectrum and high thermal conductivity to obtain few tens of fs pulses with high repetition rates. Parasitic effects during the amplification process however seriously limit the energy that can be extracted from the gain medium and also they distort the gain profile. Nevertheless, the application of the Extraction During Pumping (EDP) technique can mitigate the depopulation losses in the gain medium with high aspect ratio [3]. We proposed to use Ti:Sa in combination with TD and EDP techniques to reach high energies at high repetition rates, and we presented numerical simulations for different amplifier geometries and parameters of the amplification [4,5].
We present the results of the proof-of-principle experiment, where a EDP-TD Ti:Sa amplifier was tested for the first time. In our experiment, the final cryogenically cooled Ti:Sa amplifier in a 100 TW/10 Hz/28 fs laser system was replaced with the EDP-TD room temperature cooled arrangement. Amplified seed pulse energy of 2.6 J was reached only for 3 passes through TD with 0.5 J of input seed and 5 J of absorbed pump energy. We verified the excellent heat extraction capabilities of our amplifier module. Results of the scaling simulations on the base of this experiment for 100s of TW peak power laser systems operating at up to 100 Hz will be also presented.
References
1. Y. Chu et al, Opt. Lett. 40, 5011-5014 (2015).
2. C. R. E. Baer et al, Opt. Exp. 20, 7054-7065 (2012).
3. V. Chvykov et al, Opt. Comm. 285, 2134-2136 (2012).
4. V. Chvykov, R. S. Nagymihaly, H. Cao, M. Kalashnikov, K. Osvay, Opt. Exp. 24, 3721 (2016).
5. V.Chvykov, R. S. Nagymihaly, H. Cao, M. Kalashnikov, K. Osvay, Opt. Lett. 41,13, 3017 (2016).

In most of cases the drift of the carrier envelope phase (CEP) of a chirped pulse amplifier (CPA) system is determined only [1], being the relevant parameter at laser-matter interactions. The need of coherent combination of multiple amplifier channels to further increase the peak power of pulses requires interferometric precision [2]. For this purpose, the stability of the group delay of the pulses may become equally important. Further development of amplifier systems requires the investigation of phase noise contributions of individual subsystems, like amplifier stages. Spectrally resolved interferometry (SRI), which is a completely linear optical method, makes the measurement of spectral phase noise possible of basically any part of a laser system [3]. By utilizing this method, the CEP stability of water-cooled Ti:Sa based amplifiers was investigated just recently, where the effects of seed and pump energy, repetition rate, and the cooling crystal mounts were thoroughly measured [4].
We present a systematic investigation on the noise of the spectral phase, including CEP, of laser pulses amplified in a cryogenically-cooled Ti:Sa amplifier of a CPA chain. The double-pass amplifier was built in the sample arm of a compact Michelson interferometer. The Ti:Sa crystal was cooled below 30 °K. The inherent phase noise was measured for different operation modes, as at various repetition rates, and pump depletion. Noise contributions of the vacuum pumps and the cryogenic refrigerator were found to be 43 and 47 mrad, respectively. We have also identified CEP noise having thermal as well as mechanical origin. Both showed a monotonically decreasing tendency towards higher repetition rates. We found that the widths of the noise distributions are getting broader towards lower repetition rates. Spectral phase noise with and without amplification was measured, and we found no significant difference in the phase noise distributions. The mechanical vibration was also measured in the setup by using an accelerometer synchronously with the optical measurements. The noise spectra of phase and vibration measurements were compared and the sources of individual noise components were identified.
References
[1] Sebastian Koke et al, Opt. Lett. 33, 2545-2547 (2008).
[2] J. Limpert et al, IEEE J. of Sel. Top. in Quant. El. 20, 0901810 (2014).
[3] A. Borzsonyi, A.P. Kovacs, K. Osvay, Appl. Sci. 3, 515-544 (2013).
[4] A. Borzsonyi, R.S. Nagymihaly, K. Osvay, Las. Phys. Lett. 13, 015301 (2016).

We present the design of a collinear femtosecond optical parametric amplification (OPA) system producing a tunable
output at wavelengths between 1030 nm and 1080 nm from a Ti:Sapphire pump laser at a wavelength of 795 nm.
Generation of a supercontinuum seed pulse is followed by one stage of amplification in Beta Barium Borate (BBO) and
two stages of amplification in Potassium Titanyle Arsenate (KTA), resulting in a 225 μJ output pulse with a duration of
90 fs. The output of the system has been measured by self-referenced spectral interferometry to yield the complete
spectrum and spectral phase of the pulse. When compared to KTP, the greater transparency of KTA in the spectral range
from 3 - 4 μm allows for reduced idler absorption and enhanced gain from the OPA process when it is pumped by the
fundamental frequency of a Ti:sapphire laser. In turn, the use of the Ti:sapphire fundamental at 795 nm as a pump
improves the efficiency with which light can be converted to wavelengths between 1030 nm and 1080 nm and
subsequently used to test components for Nd-based laser systems. This OPA system is operated at 1 kHz for diagnostic
development and laser-induced damage threshold testing of optical components for the ELI-Beamlines project.

The SG II 5PW laser is designed as an open ultra-short high power laser facility that operates at the wavelength of 808nm. Three optical parametric chirped pulse amplification (OPCPA) stages are used to ensure the uncompressed pulse energy up to 260J. With a four pass zigzag compressor, the pulse width is compressed into less than 30fs and the pulse energy about 150J. By using BBO and LBO crystal, the first two OPCPA amplifiers have been accomplished this year. 35J@21fs outputs have been achieved. Since the largest size of the LBO crystal now is only about 100mm×100mm that is not enough for the needs of the third OPCPA amplifier. In our work, potassium deuterium phosphate (DKDP) as a candidate crystal has been studied theoretically and experimentally. Phase-matching parameters for various deuterium doped rate DKDP crystals are calculated. OPCPA amplifier based on 95% deuterium doped rate is designed and the output characteristics are simulated by OPA coupled wave equations. The results show that DKDP crystals with deuterium doped rate higher than 90% can be utilized in ultra-short high power laser systems that support the pulse width shorter than 30 femtoseconds. Still by estimation, when Quasi-phase-matching techniques and collinear design are used in small signal OPCPA amplification, the greatest efficiency can reach above 55%. By experiment it has proved that the output spectrum width can be more than 80nm.

In this paper we present details of the commissioning of DiPOLE100, a kW-class nanosecond pulsed diode pumped solid
state laser (DPSSL), at the HiLASE Centre at Dolní Břežany in the Czech Republic. The laser system, built at the
Central Laser Facility (CLF), was dismantled, packaged, shipped and reassembled at HiLASE over a 12 month period by
a collaborative team from the CLF and HiLASE. First operation of the laser at the end of 2016 demonstrated
amplification of 10 ns pulses at 10 Hz pulse repetition rate to an energy of 105 J at 1029.5 nm, representing the world’s
first kW average power, high-energy, nanosecond pulsed DPSSL. To date DiPOLE100 has been operated for over
2.5 hours at energies in excess of 100 J at 10 Hz, corresponding to nearly 105 shots, and has demonstrated long term
energy stability of less than 1% RMS for continuous operation over 1 hour. This confirms the power scalability of multislab
cryogenic gas-cooled amplifier technology and demonstrates its potential as a laser driver for next generation
scientific, industrial, and medical applications.

We present an active cavity pointing stabilization system based on a novel method that tracks the cavity mode position directly on the thin disk gain medium itself. Here, the overlap of the lasing cavity with the pump, visible as a depletion within the pumped area, is most crucial to the stability of the laser. Short term stability as well as long term stability are significantly increased enabling day long operation, directly from a cold start of the laser system, without the need for thermalization and manual alignment.

The Laser Megajoule (LMJ) is a French large scale laser facility dedicated to inertial fusion and plasma physics research. LMJ front-ends are based on fiber laser technology at nanojoule range [1]. Scaling the energy of those fiber seeders to the millijoule range is a way to upgrade LMJ’s front ends architecture and could also be used as seeder for lasers for ELI project for example. However, required performances are so restrictive (optical-signal-to-noise ratio higher than 50 dB, temporally-shaped nanosecond pulses and spatial single-mode top-hat beam output) that such fiber systems are very tricky to build.
High-energy fiber amplifiers
In 2015, we have demonstrated, an all-fiber MOPA prototype able to produce a millijoule seeder, but unfortunately not 100% conform for all LMJ’s performances. A major difficulty was to manage the frequency modulation used to avoid stimulated Brillouin scattering, to amplitude modulation (FM-AM) conversion, this limits the energy at 170µJ.
For upgrading the energy to the millijoule range, it’s necessary to use an amplifier with a larger core fiber. However, this fiber must still be flexible; polarization maintaining and exhibit a strictly single-mode behaviour. We are thus developing a new amplifier architecture based on an Yb-doped tapered fiber: its core diameter is from a narrow input to a wide output (MFD 8 to 26 µm). A S² measurement on a 2,5m long tapered fiber rolled-up on 22 cm diameter confirmed that this original geometry allows obtaining strictly single-mode behaviour. In a 1 kHz repetition rate regime, we already obtain 750 µJ pulses, and we are on the way to mJ, respecting LMJ performances.
Beam delivery
In LMJ architecture the distance between the nanojoule fiber seeder and the amplifier stages is about 16 m. Beam delivery is achieved with a standard PM fiber, such a solution is no longer achievable with hundreds of kilowatt peak powers. An efficient way to minimize nonlinear effects is to use hollow-core (HC) fibers. The comparison between the different fibers will be presented in the conference.
Fiber spatial beam shaping
Spatial beam shaping (top-hat profile) is mandatory to optimize the energy extraction in free-space amplifier. It would be very interesting to obtain a flat-top beam in an all-fiber way. Accordingly, we have design and realize a large mode area single-mode top-hat fiber able to deliver a coherent top-hat beam. This fiber, with larger MFD adapted to mJ pulse, will be implemented to perform the spatial beam shaping from coherent Gaussian profile to coherent top-hat intensity profile in the mJ range. In conclusion, we will present an all-fiber MOPA built to fulfil stringent requirements for large scale laser facility seeding. We have already achieved 750 µJ with 10 ns square pulses. Transport of high peak power pulses over 17 m in a hollow-core fiber has been achieved and points out FM to AM conversion management issues. Moreover, spatial beam shaping is obtained by using specifically designed single-mode fibers. Various optimizations are currently under progress and will be presented.

We demonstrate a first-of-its-kind efficient chirped pulse amplification of broadband mid-IR (4-5 μm) femtosecond seed pulse (230 ps, 4μJ) generated in AgGaS2 based OPA driven by Cr:forsterite laser in multi-pass Fe2+:ZnSe amplifier optically pumped by solid-state Q-switched Cr:Yb:Ho:YSGG laser (2.85 μm, 30mJ, 5Hz, 0.6 J/cm2). The system delivers 1.2 mJ at pulse duration of 230 ps. Straightforward compression to 150 fs pulse is achievable with 70% efficiency using diffraction grating pair with peak power of about 6 GW. Further non-linear compression in a bulk CaF2 due to the SPM and anomalous GVD should provide the enhancement of peak power up to 20 GW. Possible routes to reach sub-TW and even TW power level in mid-IR are discussed.

Similar to ytterbium doped laser materials laser operation with thulium doped media is possible within a quasi-three level scheme, which especially for pulse pumped lasers is a drawback for efficient laser operation, as a significant amount of energy is required to bleach out the laser medium. Since this energy cannot be extracted, it is lost for the amplification process. Hence, operation of such lasers at cryogenic temperatures seems to be an appropriate solution. For further modeling and derivation of design rules for future laser systems based on such a scheme reliable spectral data is needed. We will present absorption and emission measurements on Tm:YAG as a function of temperature in the range from 80 K to 300 K covering both the absorption bands around 800 nm and the emission bands up to 2.1 μm. The spectral measurements were carried out on two samples of Tm:YAG with doping levels of 2 at.% and 8 at.%. Precautions for reabsorption effects were taken to allow for accurate results over the whole measurement range. From these measurements we have derived absorption and emission cross sections and radiative lifetimes. By comparing the latter values to values obtained by highly accurate measurements of the lifetime using the pinhole method we could also estimate the quantum efficiency.

Optical pumping of laser materials is an effective way to create a population inversion necessary for laser operation. However, a fraction of the pump energy is always transfered as heat into the laser material, which is mainly caused by the quantum defect. For Yb3+-doped materials, the small energy difference between the pump level and the laser level and the pumping with narrowband high-power laser diodes result in a quantum defect of approx. 9%, which is significantly lower compared to other dopants e.g. Ti3+ (33%) or Nd3+ (24%). Due to the low heat introduction, high optical-to-optical efficiency and high repetition rate laser systems based on diode-pumping are well-suited for a number of applications. Here, however, laser beam quality is of crucial importance. Phase distortions and beam profile modulations can lead to optical damages as well as a significant reduction of the focal spot intensity.
Pump-induced phase aberrations are the main cause for phase distortions of the amplified laser beam. The heat transferred to the material causes a change of the refractive index (dn/dT), thermal expansion and stress within the laser material, eventually leading to spatial phase aberrations (also called ‘thermal lens’). However, the spatially dependent distribution of the population inversion itself also leads to spatial phase aberrations. Since electron excitation directly leads to a change in the charge distribution of the laser active ions, the dynamic response of the material to external fields changes. These electronic phase aberrations (also called ‘population lens’) are described by a change in the polarizability of the material. Due to the low quantum defect of Yb3+-doped materials, this effect becomes more important.
We show the first comprehensive spatio-temporal characterization of the pump-induced phase aberration including both effects. A high-resolution interference measurement was carried out with time steps of 50µs for times during the pump period and the cooling period between subsequent pump pulses. We found that both phase effects significantly contribute to the overall phase distortions. Since the temporal characteristic of the electronic phase depends on the fluorescence lifetime and the thermal phase on the thermal diffusivity, both phase effects could be distinguished by their different lifetimes. The measurements were carried out for Yb:YAG, Yb:CaF2 and Yb:glass, and are in excellent agreement to our detailed, COMSOL-based, spatio-temporal phase simulations. Since Yb:CaF2 and Yb:glass provide a negative dn/dT, the electronic phase change becomes even more important and, in case of Yb:CaF2, almost completely compensates the thermal phase imprint of a pump pulse during the time frame of laser pulse amplification.

We investigated wavefront aberrations in a cryogenically cooled Yb:YAG slab with a wavefront sensor using
a probe beam technique under non-lasing condition. To analyze the pump-induced phase aberrations created in the
crystal, the measured wavefronts were fitted with orthonormal Zernike polynomials. The Yb:YAG crystal of 2 mm
thickness, 10 mm diameter, and 3 at.% doping concentration was mounted in a copper holder in a closed-loop pulse tube
cryostat with cooling capacity of 12 W at 100 K. The gain medium was single-end pumped by a fiber-coupled laser
diode at pumping intensity of ~6.5 kW/cm2 with a maximum repetition rate of 100 Hz, pulse duration of 1 ms, and pump
spot diameter of 2.5 mm. The time resolved measurement revealed that defocus, which was the main wavefront
aberration, represents not only a thermal lensing effect but also an electronic lensing effect. The thermally induced
defocus is more dominant at high repetition rate than the electronically induced defocus.
We also measured wavefront aberrations of amplified beams in a cryogenically cooled Yb:YAG slab. A room
temperature operated thin-disk regenerative amplifier was used as a seed laser. The seed beam was amplified in the
cryogenically cooled crystal at 160 K in a double pass configuration. The wavefront measurement was conducted at
semi-saturated conditions, at three different repetition rates: 10 Hz, 20 Hz and 40 Hz, and at five different pump
intensities in the range between 6.5 kW/cm2 and 14.8 kW/cm2. Under lasing condition, only defocus aberration were
induced. Due to opposite signs of the defocus aberration of the seed beam and pumped induced in the Yb:YAG crystal,
wavefront of the amplified beam had smaller PtV (Peak to Valley) and RMS values than the seed beam.

Relations among absorption of pump beam, quantum defect and thermal load were investigated for pump wavelengths of
968 nm and near 940 nm in two independent, real-time measurement experiments complemented with thermal
distribution simulation. Saturation of absorption at 969 nm pumping for non-lasing operational regime, which affects
temperature rise and exists independently of the thin disk type, disk head construction, pump power and pump beam
diameter is reported. Disk temperature dependence of absorption, quantum defect and disk geometry and large difference
between absorption, disk temperature and o-o efficiency at both pump wavelengths are discussed.

In this paper we are giving a summary of the Apollon 10 PW facility laser design together with updated laser
performance. The Apollon facility is currently under construction in France. The APOLLON laser system is a laser
designed for delivering pulses as short as 15 fs (10-15 s) with an energy exceeding 150 Joules on target. The peak power
delivered by this laser system will be 10 Petawatts (1016W). The Apollon laser system will be delivering 4 beams: one 10
PW beam (F1 beam 400 mm diameter), one 1 PW beam (F2 beam 140 mm diameter) and two additional probe beams
(F3 and F4) at a repetition rate of 1 shot per minute. The laser system is based on Ti-sapphire amplifiers pumped by
frequency doubled solid-state lasers. The repetition rate of the high energy part will be 1 shot per minute. The main beam
at the output of the last amplifier will be split and dispatched to two experimental areas. The main laser beam is
delivering 30 J before compression at a repetition rate of 1 shot per minute and we are currently increasing to get 100J.

ELI-ALPS in Hungary, one of the three pillars of the Extreme Light Infrastructure, aims at providing diverse light sources, including energetic attosecond pulses at the highest possible repetition rates. One of the main laser systems for driving plasma and gas-based HHG stages, is a state-of-the-art 1 kHz few-cycle laser called SYLOS. Targeted pulse parameters are an energy of 100 mJ and a duration shorter than two optical cycles (<6 fs), with outstanding energy, phase and pointing stability as well as high spatiotemporal quality.
The first phase of the laser system has already set a new standard in kHz laser system engineering and technology. The performance and reliability of the SYLOS laser have been consistently tested over the course of a six-month trial period. During this time the system was running at least 8 hours a day at full power for more than 5 months. The current output parameters are 5 TW peak power, 45 mJ pulse energy with 9 fs duration and 300 mrad CEP stability, while the spectrum spans over 300 nm around 840 nm central wavelength. The layout follows the general scheme NOPCPA architecture with a passively CEP-stabilized front-end. The pulses are negatively chirped for the amplification process and compressed by a combination of large aperture bulk glass blocks and positively chirped mirrors under vacuum conditions at the output.
During the trial period, the laser system demonstrated outstanding reliability. Daily startup and shutdown procedures take only a few minutes, and the command-control system enables pulse parameters to be modified instantly. Controlling the delays of individual NOPCPA stages makes it possible to tailor the output spectrum of the pulses and tune the central wavelength between 770 nm and 940 nm. We performed several experimental tests to find out the pulse characteristics. Pulse duration was verified with Wizzler, chirp-scan, autocorrelation methods and a stereo-ATI independently. All of them confirmed the sub-9 fs pulse duration. We recorded the long-term waveform and pointing stabilities of the beam in order to find out the effect of the temperature load on optical elements. Excluding a short initial warm up time, stable signals were observed in general. The in-loop and out-of-loop CEP stability was cross-checked between f-to-2f and stereo-ATI devices. Moreover, the inherent CEP stability of the system without feedback loop was also found to be surprisingly robust thanks to the passive CEP stabilization of the front-end. The polarization contrast was better than 1000:1. The temporal contrast was also measured independently with Sequoia and Tundra cross-correlators, and on the ns scale with a fast photodiode and GHz oscilloscope as well. Results showed that the pulse pedestal generally consists of parametric superfluorescence below the 1E-7 level and about 100 ps long, well in accordance with the pump duration. Delaying the pump pulse allows us to shift the seed pulse to the front and reach a pre-pulse pedestal below 1E-11 at 30 ps before the pulse peak. Detailed findings on all the examined pulse characteristics of the SYLOS laser will be reported in this presentation.

A comparison of various pulse stretcher designs accommodating material dispersion for a <; 150 fs 10 PW Nd:glass laser system using low dispersion diffraction gratings is presented. Since the pulse amplification demands a high stretch ratio of the stretcher to suppress non-linear effects and a high temporal contrast of the pulse is required to avoid ionization of the experimental targets, the design of the stretcher is a critical part for dispersion management. Here, we compare several designs using only one diffraction grating based on either a Perry-Banks or an Offner stretcher types, mostly at the Littrow angle. The target spectral phase profile is achieved through the tuning of the grating position, the angle of incidence on the grating, the radii of curvature of curved mirrors and the line density of the grating.

Glass matrix doped with rare-earth ions is a promising laser active medium for high power laser systems. Due to amorphous structure of glasses the absorption and emission spectra lines are broader in comparison with crystalline materials thus pumping radiation can be absorbed efficiently, moreover much broader gain bandwidth is suitable for generation of ultra-short pulses. Another advantage of the glass matrix is the possibility to fabricate large volume ingots and simultaneously preservation of sufficient optical quality. The lower thermal conductivity of glasses can be compensated by geometry of the active medium for instance shaped into fibres or discs. We present temperature dependence of spectroscopic and laser properties of newly developed Er, Yb - doped potassium-lanthanum phosphate glass, which is appropriate for generation of radiation at 1.53 μm. The sample of Er,Yb:KLaP glassy mixture was cut into disc shape with dimensions of 2.5 mm (thickness) and 5 mm (diameter) and its faces were polished plan-parallelly without being anti-reflection coated. The temperature dependence of the transmission and emission spectra Er,Yb:KLaP together with the fluorescence decay time were measured the temperature range from 80 to 400 K. The fluorescence lifetime of manifold 4I13/2 (upper laser level) prolonged and the intensity of up-conversion radiation decreased with decreasing temperature. The longitudinal excitation of Er,Yb:KLaP was carried out by a fibre-coupled laser diode (pulse duration 2 ms, repetition rate 10 Hz, pump wavelength 969 nm). Laser resonator was hemispherical, with flat pumping mirror (HR @ 1.5 μm) and spherical output coupler (R = 98 % @ 1.5 - 1.6 μm). The Er,Yb:KLaP glass laser properties were investigated in the temperature range 80 - 300 K. The highest slope efficiency with respect to absorbed pumped power was 6.1 % at 80 K. The maximum output of peak amplitude power was 0.71 W at 80 K, i.e. 1.2 times higher than at 300 K. Tunability of laser wavelength at 80 K in range 1528 - 1552 nm was obtained using MgF2 birefringent filter. From our measurement it can be concluded, that spectroscopic and laser properties of newly developed Er,Yb:KLaP glass are slightly temperature dependent.

GaN laser diodes fabricated from the AlGaInN material system is an emerging technology for
high power, optical integration and quantum applications. The AlGaInN material system allows
for laser diodes to be fabricated over a very wide range of wavelengths from u.v., ~380nm, to the
visible ~530nm, by tuning the indium content of the laser GaInN quantum well, giving rise to
new and novel applications including displays and imaging systems, free-space and underwater
telecommunications and the latest quantum technologies such as optical atomic clocks and atom
interferometry.

Distributed Bragg reflector tapered diode lasers (DBR-TPL) based on a quantum-well structure are presented, which emit at various wavelengths between 1100 and 1200 nm. Long lifetimes of these diode lasers are demonstrated. The lasers feature a high radiance facilitating a highly efficient second harmonic generation (SHG) in lithium niobate (PPMgO:LN) ridge waveguide crystals in a single-pass configuration. SHG output powers up to
0.86 W corresponding to SHG power densities in the ridge waveguide core > 1 MW/cm2 are achieved for nearly diffraction limited beams at wavelengths of 561, 578 and 589 nm. Absorption behavior at these power densities is investigated without observation of nonlinear absorption phenomena.

High-energy solid-state laser is an important way to achieve laser fusion research. Laser fusion facility includes thousands of various types of large aperture optics. These large aperture optics should be assembled with high precision and high efficiency. Currently, however, the assembly of large aperture optics is by man’s hand which is in low level of efficiency and labor-intensive. Here, according to the characteristics of the assembly of large aperture optics, we designed three kinds of grasping devices. Using Finite Element Method, we simulated the impact of the grasping device on the PV value and the RMS value of the large aperture optics. The structural strength of the grasping device’s key part was analyzed. An experiment was performed to illustrate the reliability and precision of the grasping device. We anticipate that the grasping device would complete the assembly of large aperture optics precisely and efficiently.

The increasing importance of extracting high optical power out of semiconductor lasers motivated several
studies in catastrophic optical damage (COD) level improvement. In this study, the influence of the resonator
length in high-power broad-area (BA) AlGaInP lasers on COD is presented. For the analyses, several 638 nm
AlGaInP 60 μm BA lasers from the same wafer were used. Resonator lengths of 900, 1200, 1500, and 1800 μm
were compared. In order to independently examine the effect of the resonator length on the maximum power
reached by the lasers before COD (PCOD), the lasers used are uncoated and unmounted, and PCOD under pulsed
mode was determined. It was found that higher output powers and eventually higher PCOD can be achieved using
longer resonators; however, it was also found that this is mainly useful when working at high output powers far
away from the laser threshold, since the threshold current and slope efficiency worsen when the resonator length
increases.

Compact, high-efficient, side-pumped monolithic Nd:YAG slab laser is presented. Designed active crystal shape ensures four internal reflections of generated laser radiation forming a ring resonator with high gain. A horizontal projection of the active medium form was a isosceles trapezoid with 18.6 mm long base, and 5 mm height. The angels between long base and legs are 87 deg. The thickness of the slab was 4 mm. Both base-sides and one leg-side was high reflective for lasing radiation. Second leg-side was partially reflective for lasing radiation and serves as an output coupler. The longer base-side was highly transparent for pumping radiation. The opposite base-side was highly reflecting for pump. To increase the pump absorption efficiency Nd-doping concentration was 1.4 % Nd/Y. As a pump source, single-bar quasi-cw fast-axis collimated laser diode JOLD-180-QPFN (Jenoptik) with peak power 180 W at 808 nm and output beam 10 0.9 mm without any further optics was used for slab side-pumping. The pumping pulses with repetition rate 5 Hz were 250 μs long (maximum pump energy 39 mJ). The Nd:YAG laser was operated at 1.06 µm. Two external mirrors (one totally reflecting, second with reflectivity 80 % at 1.06 μm) were used to form the oscillator. The laser was tested in the free-running regime. The maximum laser output energy reached was 5.9 mJ which corresponds to optical-to-optical efficiency of 15 %. The laser slope efficiency in respect to laser diode output was 20 %. The divergence of multimode output beam was 7 × 2.5mrad.

In this paper, we investigated laser performance of Er:Y2O3 ceramics at room temperature. With pulsed pumping with duty cycle of 1%, 1.02 W of peak output power was obtained at wavelength of 2.7 μm with slope efficiency of 3%. Furthermore, absorption spectra of the ceramics and temperature evolution for different pumping conditions were examined.

Laser radiation in the wavelength range around 2 μm is required for its specific properties - it is very suitable for medical
applications, remote sensing, or pumping of optical parametric oscillators to generate ultrafast pulses in the mid-IR
region further exploited in nonlinear optics. Crystals as YLF, YAG, LLF, and GdVO4 doped by holmium were already
investigated and found suitable for the tunable laser generation around 2.1 mμ. Only a few works are devoted to the laser
operation of holmium-doped fluorides as CaF2. In this work, pulsed and continuous-wave laser operation of a modified-
Bridgman-grown Ho:CaF2 active crystal at room temperature is reported. A commercial 50 W 1940 nm Tm-fiber laser
was used to pump a laser oscillator based on a novel 10 mm long 0.5 at.% Ho:CaF2 active crystal placed in the Peltiercooled
holder. In the pulsed regime (10 ms, 10 Hz), the laser slope efficiency of 53 % with respect to the absorbed pump
power was achieved. The laser generated at the central wavelength of ~2085 nm with the maximum mean output power
of 365 mW corresponding to the power amplitude of 3.65 W. In the continuous wave regime, the maximum output
power was 1.11 W with the slope efficiency of 41 % with respect to the absorbed pump power. To our best knowledge
this is the first demonstration of this laser active material operating in the CW regime at room temperature. The tuning
range over 60 nm from 2034 to 2094 nm was achieved using a birefringent filter showing the possibility to develop
a mode-locked laser system generating pulses in the sub-picosecond range.

Tiled-grating compressors of ultra-short pulse multi-petawatt lasers are currently the only viable way how to meet beam size requirements and stay within the damage threshold of the largest available gratings. Recently, a method how to double the effective aperture of compressor gratings by phasing them with perpendicularly positioned mirrors has been proposed, providing simplification to the traditional grating-grating tiling scheme by reducing the number of alignment degrees of freedom. The drawback of the method lies in tighter requirements on adjustment precision and stability of the system making the alignment and monitoring a challenging task. Here we propose and analyze different approaches to precision control of mirror-grating phasing and present a comparative experimental verification of the alignment systems on a small-scale test bench.

The conceptual design and proof of principle experimental results of a polarization rotator based on mirrors are
presented. The device is suitable for any-angle, online rotation of the plane of polarization of high peak intensity ultrashort
laser pulses. Controllable rotation of the polarization vector of short laser pulses with a broad bandwidth requires
achromatic retarding plates which have a limited scalability and the substantial plate thickness can lead to pulse
broadening and inaccurate polarization rotation. Polarization rotators based on reflective optical elements are preferable
alternatives to wave plates especially when used in high average power or high peak intensity ultra-short laser systems.
The control of the polarization state is desirable in many laser-matter interaction experiments e.g., high harmonic and
attosecond pulse generation, electron, proton and ion acceleration, electron-positron pair creating, vacuum nonlinear
polarization effect. The device can also serve as a beam attenuator, in combination with a linear polarizer.

Optical systems with UV lasers are widely used in various areas of manufacturing, for processing materials. To provide high operation accuracy, the equipment with high power UV laser sources requires complicated optical and mechanical unit with control electronic blocks. In order to develop successful and stable equipment and to increase accuracy, the development of each part (optical, mechanical, and electronic) is needed to solve many complex engineering problems. In this article the special features of the development of an optical unit with a high powered UV laser source are considered along with some problems and solutions.

A laser processing is widely applied to cutting, drilling, welding, bending and surface treatment in industry. Lasers with a wavelength of 1 μm are mainly used and the processing is realized by melting materials. This thermal process has a high productivity but the processed surface is hard to use for precision machining. This report is focusing on two materials which are classified in wide band gap. Ablation rate was measured with a laser microscope and an optical one. Excimer laser is expected to be a useful tool for these materials

High average power wavelength tunable picosecond mid-IR source based on parametric down-conversion is being
developed. The conversion system is pumped by a Yb:YAG thin-disk laser delivering 100 W of average power at
100 kHz repetition rate, 1030 nm wavelength, and 3 ps pulse width. First, part of the beam pumps an optical parametric
generator (OPG) consisting of a PPLN crystal. The generated wavelength is determined by PPLN’s poling period and
temperature. Signal beam covered wavelength range between 1.46 mμ and 1.95 mμ. The corresponding idler
wavelengths are 3.5 mμ and 2.18 mμ, respectively. Signal beam of about 20 mW was generated at 2 W pumping and
double pass arrangement of the OPG stage. The signal pulse energy is further boosted in an optical parametric amplifier
(OPA) consisting of two KTP crystals. The signal beam was amplified to 2 W at pumping of 38 W. The idler beam is
taken out of the OPA stage as well. Wavelength tuning by KTP crystals’ phase-matching angle change was achieved in
ranges and 1.7 - 1.95 μm and 2.18 - 2.62 mμ for signal and idler beam, respectively.

Keywords/Phrases

Keywords

in

Remove

in

Remove

in

Remove

+ Add another field

Search In:

Proceedings

Volume

Journals +

Volume

Issue

Page

Journal of Applied Remote SensingJournal of Astronomical Telescopes Instruments and SystemsJournal of Biomedical OpticsJournal of Electronic ImagingJournal of Medical ImagingJournal of Micro/Nanolithography, MEMS, and MOEMSJournal of NanophotonicsJournal of Photonics for EnergyNeurophotonicsOptical EngineeringSPIE Reviews